Table of Contents

Float (insurance)

The 30-Second Summary

What is Float? A Plain English Definition

Imagine you own a popular local coffee shop, “Steady Brew Coffee Co.” To boost customer loyalty, you sell gift cards. A customer pays you $50 today for a gift card they might use over the next several months. What happens to that $50 in the meantime? It sits in your cash register. You haven't earned it yet—you still owe the customer $50 worth of coffee—but you hold it. You can use that cash for your business operations, maybe to buy more coffee beans or pay your rent. This temporary cash you hold, but don't yet own, is a simple form of float. Now, scale that idea up to a massive, global level. That's insurance float. An insurance company, like GEICO or Progressive, collects premium payments from millions of customers for car, home, or business insurance. You pay your premium today, but you might not file a claim for months, years, or perhaps ever. The insurance company collects all this money upfront and holds it in a vast pool. This pool of money—premiums collected but not yet paid out in claims—is float. It is, in essence, money from customers that the insurance company gets to use for free before (and if) it has to give it back to cover a loss. This unique feature turns the insurance business model on its head compared to most other industries that have to produce a product first and then get paid. Insurers get paid first. Warren Buffett, who built much of the Berkshire Hathaway empire on the back of insurance float, described it best:

“Insurers receive premiums upfront and pay claims later… This collection of funds, a float, will eventually go to others. In the meantime, we get to invest it for Berkshire's benefit… If our premiums exceed the total of our expenses and eventual losses, we register an underwriting profit, and the float costs us less than nothing. We, in effect, get paid for holding other people's money.”

This “less than nothing” cost is the secret sauce. While a normal business has to pay a bank interest to borrow money, a great insurance company can actually get paid to hold billions of dollars of other people's money. This is arguably one of the most powerful and sustainable business advantages in the entire financial world.

Why It Matters to a Value Investor

For a value investor focused on a company's long-term intrinsic value and durable competitive advantages (or “moats”), understanding float isn't just helpful—it's absolutely critical when analyzing an insurance company. Float is the engine room of a great insurer. Here’s why it's so important:

When both engines are running smoothly—especially when Engine 1 is so efficient that it generates a profit—the company becomes a compounding machine of immense power.

In short, float is not just an accounting byproduct. It is the central economic characteristic that separates a mediocre insurer from a truly exceptional, long-term investment.

How to Analyze and Interpret Float

While float itself is a conceptual pool of money, its quality can be measured with a single, crucial metric: the cost of float. This calculation is the key to unlocking whether an insurer's core business is a source of strength or a hidden liability.

The Method: Calculating the "Cost of Float"

The goal is to determine how much it “costs” the company to hold onto its float for a year. A positive cost means the insurance operations lost money, while a negative cost means they made a profit. The formula is straightforward: `Cost of Float (%) = Underwriting Loss / Average Float` Let's break down the components in plain English:

Interpreting the Result

The result of this calculation is one of the most powerful indicators of an insurer's quality.

Crucially, a value investor must look at the trend over many years (5-10 years is ideal). Any insurer can have one bad year due to a major hurricane or other catastrophe. But a great insurer will demonstrate a low and stable cost of float across an entire economic cycle.

A Practical Example

Let's compare two hypothetical insurance companies to see how the concept of float plays out in the real world. Both companies are the same size, with an average float of $10 billion.

Company Fortress Insurance Co. Gambler's General
Business Strategy Focuses on niche, profitable markets. Known for disciplined underwriting and turning away bad risks. Aims to grow market share quickly by offering the lowest prices on standard auto insurance.
Average Float $10 billion $10 billion
Underwriting Result $100 million profit $400 million loss
Calculation Cost = (-$100M Profit) / $10B Float Cost = ($400M Loss) / $10B Float
Cost of Float -1% +4%

Investor Analysis:

Despite having the same amount of float, Fortress is a far superior business. It creates value from two sources, while Gambler's General is trying to fill a hole in its leaky underwriting bucket with investment returns. A value investor would recognize that Fortress has a deep moat and a culture of discipline, making it a much safer and more profitable long-term investment.

Advantages and Limitations

Strengths

Weaknesses & Common Pitfalls

1)
A combined ratio below 100% means there was an underwriting profit, and a ratio above 100% means there was a loss. For example, a 98% combined ratio means the company made a $2 profit for every $100 of premium earned.